-------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: [WI] CFP ACIS Track 9: USABILITY, USABILITY THINKING, AND HUMAN CENTRED DESIGN Date: Sat, 25 Jul 2020 21:55:29 +1000 From: Christopher Lueg cplueg@gmail.com Reply-To: Christopher Lueg cplueg@gmail.com To: wi@lists.kit.edu
CALL FOR PAPERS ACIS Track 9: USABILITY, USABILITY THINKING, AND HUMAN CENTRED DESIGN
TRACK CO-CHAIRS
Christopher LUEG, BFH Institute for Medical Informatics (I4MI), Switzerland, christopher.lueg@bfh.ch
Deborah BUNKER, The University of Sydney Business School, deborah.bunker@sydney.edu.au
Anushia INTHIRAN, University of Canterbury, anushia.inthiran@canterbury.ac.nz
ACIS 2020 is going virtual. We are committing ourselves to provide an interactive online experience for attendees. We cordially invite you to submit a paper to our track.
Paper submissions close on 10 August 2020. If your paper is accepted, your work will be published in the conference proceedings, and you are welcome to present it virtually.
Please see the following links for:
Further conference format details https://www.acis2020.org/covid19-update Paper submission guidelines: https://www.acis2020.org/submission-templates-and-guidelines
We are interested in receiving your research, research-in-progress and short papers by 10 August 2020.
TRACK DESCRIPTION
(Good) Usability has long been established as a key criteria in human centered approaches to IT systems design. Usability is typically investigated during the design and/or evaluation phases of new IT systems that are either built in-house or sourced from third parties. Usability thinking is more broadly applicable to almost any aspect of contemporary organisations since, in the words of usability guru Nielsen, usability isn't about technology but about human behavior which changes very slowly, if at all.
This track seeks contributions that explore usability, usability thinking, and human centered design in the context of contemporary organisations. The emphasis is on IS perspectives and experiences in the sense that technologies are looked at as situated in an organisational context (understood very broadly and inclusively).
TOPICS OF INTEREST (INCLUDE BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO) Human centered design in organisational contexts (eg, health portals, aged care support, security/privacy, emotion recognition, personalisation) Benefits and barriers to embracing usability thinking in organisations
Usability thinking and systems adoption/diffusion frameworks Usability as a socio-technical concept/construct (including HCI) Usability and IS project risk management Designing for minorities and under-represented groups Universal accessibility
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